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The
interviews, remarkable for their honesty and insight, bring us
into the writer’s world, revealing the passion and inspiration
that motivates these young writers, as well as the hardships they
endure in pursuit of their art. By asking thoughtful and probing
questions, Michelle Berry and Natalee Caple elicit frank and intriguing
details of how writers work, structure their days, and order their
physical space to facilitate the act of writing. Many of the authors
here explore the impact of technological innovation and mass culture
on contemporary fiction, as well as the influence of various art
forms on the way they imagine stories. The writers in The Notebooks
speak candidly about their political engagement, their passion
for writing, and their desire to produce art that will last.
Contributors: Catherine Bush, Eliza Clark, Lynn Coady,
Lynn Crosbie, Steven Heighton, Yann Martel, Derek McCormack, Hal
Niedzviecki, Andrew Pyper, Michael Redhill, Eden Robinson, Russell
Smith, Esta Spalding, Michael Turner, R.M. Vaughan, Michael Winter,
Marnie Woodrow
"These seventeen writers come from different backgrounds, different
parts of the country, have different lifestyles, and write very
different kinds of fiction, yet the connections between them are
still plentiful. As a group they are highly engaged with the world
around them, politically sophisticated, intelligent, modest about
their potential success, and passionate about the act of writing.
We hope that The Notebooks inspires an ongoing discussion
with young writers at work and answers some of the silent questions
that readers have longed to ask." -- From the Introduction
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
Michelle Berry is the author of two critically acclaimed short-story
collections, How to Get There from Here and Margaret
Lives in the Basement, and the novel What We All Want.
Her second novel, Blur, will be published in Canada in
Spring 2002. Both novels will be published in the UK. She is also
the author of a collaborative art/fiction book called Postcard
Fictions.
Natalee Caple is the author of two books of fiction, The Heart
is its Own Reason and The Plight of Happy People in an
Ordinary World, and a book of poetry, A More Tender Ocean.
Caple has achieved international attention and critical praise
for her fiction and poetry.
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